MAYOR BLOOMBERG DISCUSSES IMPROVED GRADUATION RATES IN NEW YORK CITY'S SCHOOLS IN WEEKLY RADIO ADDRESS

The following is the text of Mayor Bloomberg's weekly radio address as prepared for delivery on 1010 WINS News Radio for Sunday, August 17, 2008

"Good morning. This is Mayor Mike Bloomberg.
I still remember the day I graduated from high school - even though it was
longer ago than I'd like to admit. Graduating is one of the proudest days in
anyone's life - up there with starting your first job, getting married, becoming
a parent - or winning a Gold medal. You really can't overestimate the value of a
high school diploma. It opens the doors to college, to better jobs, to higher
wages, to a brighter future and that's why a major focus of our public school
reforms is helping more students graduate and move on to college or get a good
job.

When we gained control of the public school
system in 2002, graduation rates had been stagnant for more than a decade. But
because we've raised standards and introduced accountability in our schools,
graduation rates have climbed steadily every single year. Last week, the State
Education Department released the numbers for 2007 and once again, the
percentage of students who graduated within four years increased. The graduation
rate for the class of 2007, including August graduates, was 55.8
percent.

While that rate is still much too low, it is
climbing faster than it is in the rest of the state, including in other big
cities like Syracuse and Buffalo. What's more, a higher percentage of students
are meeting the rigorous requirements needed to earn a Regents Diploma, which
means they're graduating better qualified than ever for successful college
careers. More students are also getting diplomas by going to summer school after
their senior year or by spending a fifth year in high school and we should
applaud them for that, because it shows that they cared enough about their
education to stick it out and finish all of their requirements.

But perhaps most uplifting, graduation rates
for Black and Hispanic students are climbing at the fastest rates. That's one
more piece of evidence that the shameful and intolerable achievement gap that
has separated students of different races and ethnicities is finally beginning
to close. Of course, it goes without saying that, despite this encouraging
progress, we've still got a long way to go. Too many children are not finishing
high school. But it's also just as clear that we are headed in the right
direction and we can't go back to the old days when the school system was mired
in dysfunction and people simply shrugged at the fact that students weren't
learning.

Accountability, which starts with mayoral
control, has been the key to our school system's turnaround. It's given us the
ability to phase out social promotion, implement fair funding for all schools,
achieve an agreement on merit-based pay for teachers, and other important
measures. The result is that crime in our schools is falling, test scores and
graduation rates continue to rise and more students are heading off to higher
education or the working world, armed with the confidence and skills they need
to live out their dreams.